The Paris Attacks: Resources from CFR and Foreign Affairs

In the aftermath of the November 13, 2015 terrorist attacks in Paris that killed 129 people, French authorities have conducted raids on suspected militants across France and launched airstrikes targeting the self-proclaimed Islamic State in the Syrian city of Raqqa. Below, the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) and Foreign Affairs offer resources on the Paris attacks.

November 18, 2015

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In the aftermath of the November 13, 2015 terrorist attacks in Paris that killed 129 people, French authorities have conducted raids on suspected militants across France and launched airstrikes targeting the self-proclaimed Islamic State in the Syrian city of Raqqa. Below, the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) and Foreign Affairs offer resources on the Paris attacks.

“The challenge posed by the Islamic State calls for several responses, as there is no single policy that promises to be sufficient,” writes CFR President Richard N. Haass in his latest op-ed in Project Syndicate. “Increased military effort is needed to bring about larger and more secure enclaves that could better protect civilians and take the fight to the Islamic State,” Haass argues, and “any successor government [to Assad] must be able to maintain order.”

“The struggle against ISIS is a political and theological fight that is largely beyond the United States,”writes Steven A. Cook, CFR’s Eni Enrico Mattei senior fellow for Middle East and Africa studies, and U.S. policymakers should resist the temptation to take on a larger role. “Washington has a responsibility to help its allies,” Cook writes, “but the stakes are so high for the local actors that U.S. efforts to influence the trajectory of politics in the region are unlikely to be successful.”

CFR Adjunct Senior Fellow Farah Pandith contends that in the fight against the Islamic State, “the most critical component is the idea space” and ideological influence. “There are almost a billion young Muslims under the age of thirty across the world, and that’s the pool from which the extremists are recruiting,” said Pandith on CBS’s Face the Nation. In a CFR.org interview, Pandith expands on the point: the West “cannot win the war against extremists without a soft power strategy” and must “[approach] this ideological fight with the same vigor we do the military one.”

Iran’s Islamic State Trap: How Tehran Uses the Terrorist Group to Get Ahead

“The only way to diminish the threat is to get on offensive, and engage in a real war against ISIS,” writes Max Boot, Jeane J. Kirkpatrick senior fellow for national security studies at CFR, in Commentary. Boot advises the United States to pursue a dual-track strategy of increasing the number of U.S. military forces in Iraq and pushing diplomatically to create a Sunni regional government backed by U.S. security guarantees.

Après Paris: Reverberations of the Terrorist Attacks

“An effective response [to the Islamic State] will require the Obama administration to be out in front: there must be no leading from behind in this effort,” writes Stewart M. Patrick, CFR senior fellow and director of the International Institutions and Global Governance program. Patrick advises the United States and its Western allies to focus on invoking the North Atlantic Treaty Organization’s Article 5 commitments and securing Europe’s borders while remaining humane.

“Although the military battle against ISIS is undeniably a top priority, the importance of the digital front should not be underestimated,” writes Jared Cohen, CFR adjunct senior fellow, in the most recent issue of Foreign Affairs. Cohen says that the Islamic State has distinct digital weaknesses and that its opponents should exploit these weaknesses to push the group into obscurity.

Syria: What Will Change Now?

Gayle Tzemach Lemmon, CFR senior fellow for women and foreign policy, questions whether the Paris attacks have changed the calculus for U.S. intervention in Syria, but concludes that is unlikely. “The commander-in-chief’s desire to avoid being dragged into another ground war in the Middle East remains strong, and the tragedy in Paris is unlikely to shift that sentiment,” Lemmon writes in Defense One.

Islamic State Must Be Kept on Defense

“You’ve got to play offense here, which is attack them [the Islamic State] locally, keep them busy, if you will, defending themselves, continue to roll back the geographic outlines of the ‘caliphate,’” said CFR President Richard N. Haass in an interview on Bloomberg Surveillance.